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Trick or Murder?: A Sophie Sayers Village Mystery (Sophie Sayers Village Mysteries Book 2) Read online




  Trick or Murder?

  DEBBIE YOUNG

  For David Penny for the Guy

  “Everyone seems to have a clear idea of how other people should lead their lives, but none about his or her own.”

  Paulo Coelho

  “Villagers should get to know the newcomer better before passing judgment.”

  Joshua Hampton

  Contents

  Contents

  1 Strange Guys

  2 The Tangled Web

  3 The Wisdom of Joshua

  4 The Play’s the Thing

  5 Solidarity Between Shops

  6 Printer’s Devil

  7 Away in a Nativity Play

  8 Gunfight at The Bluebird

  9 Fancy Dress

  10 Frightening Writers

  11 Poetic Licence

  12 Thank God It’s Friday

  13 Right Guy, Right Place

  14 Penny For Them

  15 Poster Campaign

  16 In the Company of Angels

  17 Dramatic Revelations

  18 The Surprise Party

  19 The Lion in Autumn

  20 The Belle of the Ball

  21 Trouble at the Barn

  22 Gloomy Sunday

  23 Hung Over

  24 The Beast of the Bookshop

  25 Penny for the Billy

  26 All Souls’ Surprise

  27 Old Tricks for New Vicar

  28 Penance by Proxy

  29 The Mysterious Guy

  30 Shaking It Up

  31 Fun Guys

  32 Alone at Last

  33 Just Desserts

  34 Some Guys Have All the Luck

  35 Hot Books

  36 Ignition, Blast Off!

  37 The Warm-up Guy

  38 Not Much Cop

  39 Flash Mob

  40 The Last Rocket

  Coming Soon

  More Sophie Sayers Village Mysteries for You to Enjoy

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Copyright Page

  1 Strange Guys

  On a crisp, bright autumn morning, an American tourist driving through the Cotswold village of Wendlebury Barrow pressed his foot down on the accelerator of his hired car. “Let’s give it some gas and get out of here,” he said to his wife. “What is this place anyway?”

  “I don’t know, honey, but I think we may have driven through a time warp. I just saw a sign advertising a fireworks party at the vicarage tonight. But this is November fifth, not July fourth.”

  She was cowering in the passenger seat at the sight of so many dead bodies being transported down the High Street. A young man was pushing one slumped in a wheelbarrow, while his friend carried another over his shoulder. A teenage girl had squeezed a third into a child’s buggy. All were converging on the vicarage, where a small boy was currently dragging a body as big as himself across a muddy lawn littered with rotting windfall apples and dead leaves.

  As the tourists drove by, they glimpsed a large mound of wood and paper at the centre of the back lawn. The woman gasped.

  “Do you think that was a funeral pyre?”

  “It’s too late for a Halloween prank, whatever it was.”

  “Maybe they celebrate the Day of the Dead here?”

  “No, that’s Mexico.” He passed her his phone. “Look up today’s date and ‘holidays’ online, if you can get a signal in this godforsaken place.”

  The search engine’s robot enlightened them. “On the fifth of November 1605, Guy Fawkes and his Catholic followers plotted to blow up the Houses of Parliament to overturn the Protestant government. The plot was foiled, and on subsequent anniversaries Guy Fawkes’ Night is celebrated with bonfire parties at which effigies of Guy Fawkes, commonly known as guys and similar in construction and appearance to scarecrows, are burned on bonfires. The traditional accompaniment of fireworks is less popular now for reasons of health and safety.”

  “Guy Fawkes, Marcia? Boy, these Brits sure choose weird names.”

  “They certainly do, Randy.”

  He changed up a gear as they sped through open country. “But why do they need so many? Isn’t one Guy Fawkes enough for them?”

  Marcia shuddered. “Burning even one is one too many for me. And at the vicar’s house, too. He doesn’t sound like a man of God. Let’s head back to the safety of a city. The English countryside is way too dangerous.”

  But the danger had barely begun. Had Randy and Marcia remained after nightfall, they’d have found fifty-four guys about to be burned on the bonfire, with one real person concealed among them.

  2 The Tangled Web

  Now that it was October, and the bookshop’s start-of-term sales had fallen away, the proprietor Hector Munro and I were busy setting up a Halloween window display to lure people back in. Hector told me Halloween was a big thing in Wendlebury Barrow, and I was looking forward to a bit of fun to liven up the shorter days of autumn. I’d only come to live there the previous June, when I inherited my Great Auntie May’s cottage and landed a job as a sales assistant at Hector’s House, the local bookshop. There was still so much for me to learn about this village that I’d started to think of as home.

  As I sprayed fake cobwebs into the top left-hand corner of the bay window, Hector, standing on a small pair of steps, was suspending rubber spiders and bats on black thread from a series of display hooks permanently set into the ceiling. Plastic snakes writhed over spooky books artfully arranged beneath them.

  Billy clattered through the shop door in time for his usual elevenses of tea and cake. “If you’d asked, I could have saved you the trouble and brought you some real cobwebs from home,” he said. “And spiders.”

  Billy’s loyalty to Hector’s House was cemented not by a love of books, which he never bought, but by the illicit hooch that Hector brewed to slip into the tea of favoured guests. The cream of the bookshop, Hector liked to call it.

  “No thanks, Billy, we’re treating Halloween strictly as fiction,” said Hector. “If we want to truly scare the village children, we’ll send them round to yours. Pass me another bat, would you, Sophie?”

  I had just set down my aerosol can and was rummaging in the props box when the shop door creaked open, and a new voice joined the conversation.

  “You’ve omitted to dust the upper left-hand quadrant.” The tall, lean stranger in a plain black suit addressed me, pointing to a fine cluster of cobwebs that I’d sprayed artistically into place. “A feather duster is the optimum weapon.”

  I smiled politely at what I presumed to be a feeble joke, until I realised from the stranger’s grim expression that he was deadly serious.

  “Trust me, my dear, I speak from experience. I’ve extinguished so many spiders in the vicarage this morning that I now count myself an arachnid expert.”

  His straggly white hair bore evidence of his morning’s battle: a dead spider lay on his tonsure-like bald patch. If I were a spider, the stranger’s steely grey eyes would have sent me scuttling for cover.

  Hector climbed down from the steps and came to stand beside me as if to provide an informal welcoming committee. When he held out his hand for a handshake, the stranger gave it a disparaging look, as if it needed a good wash, and did not return the gesture.

  “Good morning, sir. We haven’t had the pleasure.”

  “Don’t you believe it. I saw him kiss her the other day.”

  I could have murdered Billy. One impulsive kiss from Hector the previous week, when he congratulated me on winnin
g a writing prize, was hardly a sin. To be honest, even if it was, I wouldn’t have minded sinning again, never mind if it did upset the sanctimonious stranger. I bet he didn’t get many kisses. That was probably why he was so sour.

  With a diplomatic smile, Hector slipped his hands into the pockets of his jeans. “I mean, I don’t think we’ve had the pleasure of seeing you in our bookshop before. Or have we?” He gazed at the stranger as if trying to place him. “I have a feeling we have met before, but I’m not sure where. You’re not local, are you?”

  The stranger looked smug. “My dear fellow, I am the most local vicar you will ever have in your emporium. I am indeed your vicar, the Reverend Philip Neep. I arrived last night as the new incumbent of the Parish of Wendlebury. This is therefore my first visit to your store.” He stared at Hector for a moment, then quickly looked away.

  Dropping the iced bun to which he’d helped himself from the tearoom counter, Billy almost ran over to join us. “Our new vicar? Welcome to Wendlebury, vicar. We wasn’t expecting you till the end of November.” He seized the vicar’s right hand in his own, pumping it up and down in vigorous greeting.

  The vicar peered down his long nose at Billy, who stood at least a head shorter than him, and was scruffy as ever in old buff cords, checked flannel shirt, and much patched tweed jacket.

  “And you are?”

  “Billy Thompson. I tend the churchyard and vicarage garden, with payment by the hour. I’ve been a member of the Friends of St Bride’s these last twenty-three years and honorary treasurer for five.”

  The vicar tugged his ambushed hand free with a look of distaste and pulled a handkerchief from his top jacket pocket to wipe it clean. “Doubtless I shall see you again at their next meeting.”

  “Oh no, vicar, you’re not on the Friends’ committee. But we do occasionally liaise with the Parochial Church Council. That’s your gang.”

  The vicar raised his eyebrows. “That will never do. I’m used to being closely involved with all the workings of my parish. After all, what is a vicar if not everyone’s friend?” He turned his back on Billy to address Hector again. “My parishioners can be so thoughtful about not overtaxing me, but to serve my community is my reason for being.”

  Frowning, Billy returned to his table to take solace in the remainder of his iced bun. “What about serving God?” he muttered with his mouth full.

  Abruptly, the vicar pushed past Hector and me and started browsing the bookshelves. He paused by the autobiography section. “Rather a lot of celebrities here, I see.” He pulled out a thick hardback by a famous supermodel with as much disdain as if it carried a social disease. Flicking through its pages, he lingered over the shiny photographs.

  “Not someone I’d consider worthy of commemoration. I’d rather read about a more inspiring role model with a humbler public profile. They’d certainly write better. Not that anybody recognises great writing when they see it these days.” He coughed, his lungs probably still dusty from his morning’s labours. “Most celebrity autobiographies are ghostwritten, you know.”

  I tried to lighten the vicar’s mood with a joke. “Then we’d better add them to our spooky window display.”

  Ignoring me, he shoved the book back onto the shelf, oblivious to the fact that his rough handling had ripped its dustjacket. Almost as an afterthought, he added, “And where is your spiritual section? I assume you have a wide selection of Bibles?”

  Hector pointed to the bottom shelf in the furthest corner. “Faiths are down there, next to Philosophy, just along from Self-help.”

  “Faiths?” The vicar pronounced the final s as if it were a second superfluous syllable. He stooped to inspect the evidence. “Buddhism? Judaism? Druids? That’s not what I asked for at all.”

  Hector, ever the diplomat, was trying hard to remain civil. I could tell he didn’t like Mr Neep’s rudeness to me or to Billy, even though Billy was frequently rude to everyone else. At least Billy had his heart in the right place. I wasn’t sure Mr Neep had a heart at all.

  “I stock what my customers are most likely to buy,” Hector explained patiently.

  The vicar swivelled round on his heel, looking like a headmaster about to chastise a schoolboy. “But, my dear fellow, if you don’t stock a good range of Bibles, how can your clientele buy them? Equally the memoirs of some more deserving fellows?”

  I could tell Hector’s teeth were gritted beneath his tolerant smile. “My limited stock is carefully curated to meet the tastes of my customers. If someone wants to buy something that’s not in stock, I place a special order for no extra charge. Such are the ways of the successful bookseller. But perhaps it would help us get to know each other better if you joined me for a pot of tea, vicar?”

  “Moral high ground to you, young Hector,” murmured Billy, sucking a stray bit of icing off his thumb.

  Crossing to the tearoom, Hector pulled out a chair at the table furthest from Billy and gestured to the vicar to sit down. “I hope we’ll see you here often.”

  Once the vicar had taken the proffered seat, I rushed over to serve him and Hector tea. The vicar looked dubiously at the cup and saucer as I set them before him. Our book-themed crockery is provided by the Literally Gifted company in return for us promoting its products in our shop, and I’d inadvertently given him the Dracula tea cup.

  “I’m sorry, I think that cup’s cracked,” I said, although it wasn’t. “I’ll get another.”

  I swiftly replaced it with Pride and Prejudice to match Hector’s Persuasion, and gave Dracula to Billy instead. As I filled the Great Expectations teapot, Hector tried to move the conversation on to safer ground.

  “I’m so glad to see they have brought you here to fill the vacancy at last. We’ve been vicarless for months.”

  “Better than being knicker—”

  Fortunately the vicar had his back to Billy, so didn’t see me clasp my hand over the old boy’s mouth to silence him. I don’t usually assault our customers, and Billy took it in good spirit, seizing the opportunity to kiss my palm. I whisked my hand away as fast as I could, secretly glad that Billy was standing up to the vicar’s rudeness.

  While I gave my hands a very thorough wash behind the tearoom counter, Hector pressed on.

  “I hope we’ll have the opportunity to welcome your wife here soon, vicar. There are plenty of clubs and societies in the village that would be glad of her company. My assistant Sophie is a member of the Wendlebury Writers and the Show Committee. I’m sure she’d be happy to make introductions.”

  “Dead,” said the vicar. “My wife is dead.”

  “I’m so sorry.” Hector fell silent.

  I wondered whether being widowed was what had made the vicar so judgmental about me and Hector. He must have been lonely.

  Billy beckoned me back to his table. “Slip him some of Hector’s special cream. That’ll soften the old bugger up a bit.”

  I fetched the jug from the fridge.

  “Would you like some cream in your tea, vicar? We do a very nice local cream for special guests. We like to support local producers.”

  “I take it black.”

  Daunted, I splashed a little into Hector’s cup. He looked grateful.

  “So, what do you do in this bookshop of yours?” The vicar asked as if it wasn’t a bookshop at all, but a thinly veiled front for an opium den. I quickly set the cream jug down on Billy’s table before the vicar could get a whiff of its contents.

  Hector rattled off the description that I recognised from the shop’s website. “We offer much more than books, stationery and greetings cards to the local community.” He indicated the various display racks. “We provide a free meeting place for all ages and interests, such as the Wendlebury Writers and book groups. Our staff offer professional coaching in reading and writing for children who need extra help outside of the school day. We also lay on seasonal children’s activities and themed events for adults, to promote a love of books and reading all year round.” He pointed to the pile of free witch and g
host activity sheets on the play table in the corner. “We’re very much involved with the life of the village school. I presume you will be too, vicar, given that it’s a Church of England foundation school?”

  “Yes, it will certainly be the school’s priority to have me guide the spiritual growth of the children and the staff.”

  I wasn’t sure that was how the school staff might see it. Although the school had been founded by the church, leaving a lasting connection between the two, I knew from the pages of the parish magazine that currently top of the staff’s wish list was a new interactive whiteboard for the school hall followed by someone to repaint the hopscotch grids in the playground.

  But the vicar had his own ideas. “I shall bring a wealth of new ideas and inspiration to the local educational establishment. “And on that note, I must ask you to remove all Halloween stock from your shop forthwith.”

  Hector took a deep breath.

  “More tea, vicar?” I said brightly, stepping forward to raise the pot to buy Hector thinking time. I could see this was going to be a two-pot problem. Mr Neep put his hand over his cup to refuse a refill as Hector began to speak.

  “I’m sorry, vicar, but that’s quite impossible. As always at this time of year, we stock a wide range of Halloween books and activity materials.” He waved his hand towards our boxes of decorations. “We always celebrate Halloween in this village, but it’s all just a bit of fun. No real witchcraft here, ha ha. Besides, this is an independent bookshop. I make my own decisions about stock and policy. My shop, my rules. So we will continue to cater for our customers’ interest in Halloween as usual.”

  The vicar shuffled back his chair, knocking the table hard enough to spill tea from the cups into the saucers. “Then I’m afraid I cannot conduct business with you, sir.”

  Hector looked taken aback. “Why ever not? Your predecessor was one of our best customers. Particularly keen on police procedurals, as I recall.”

  Neep slammed his hands down onto the table so hard that I feared he might break the china. Then he screwed up a paper serviette that he had not even used and threw it down. It might as well have been a gauntlet.